CERN Accelerating science

Article
Title Efficient Production of High Specific Activity Thulium-167 at Paul Scherrer Institute and CERN-MEDICIS
Author(s) Heinke, Reinhard (CERN ; Leuven U.) ; Chevallay, Eric (CERN) ; Chrysalidis, Katerina (CERN) ; Cocolios, Thomas E (Leuven U.) ; Duchemin, Charlotte (Leuven U. ; CERN) ; Fedosseev, Valentin N (CERN) ; Hurier, Sophie (Leuven U. ; SCK-CEN, Mol) ; Lambert, Laura (CERN) ; Leenders, Benji (Leuven U. ; SCK-CEN, Mol ; Gent U.) ; Marsh, Bruce A (CERN) ; van der Meulen, Nicholas P (PSI, Villigen) ; Sprung, Peter (PSI, Villigen) ; Stora, Thierry (CERN) ; Tosato, Marianna (PSI, Villigen) ; Wilkins, Shane G (CERN) ; Zhang, Hui (PSI, Villigen) ; Talip, Zeynep (PSI, Villigen)
Publication 2021
In: Frontiers in Medicine 8 (2021) 712374
DOI 10.3389/fmed.2021.712374
Subject category Nuclear Physics - Experiment
Abstract Thulium-167 is a promising radionuclide for nuclear medicine applications with potential use for both diagnosis and therapy (“theragnostics”) in disseminated tumor cells and small metastases, due to suitable gamma-line as well as conversion/Auger electron energies. However, adequate delivery methods are yet to be developed and accompanying radiobiological effects to be investigated, demanding the availability of $^{167}$Tm in appropriate activities and quality. We report herein on the production of radionuclidically pure $^{167}$Tm from proton-irradiated natural erbium oxide targets at a cyclotron and subsequent ion beam mass separation at the CERN-MEDICIS facility, with a particular focus on the process efficiency. Development of the mass separation process with studies on stable $^{169}$Tm yielded 65 and 60% for pure and erbium-excess samples. An enhancement factor of thulium ion beam over that of erbium of up to several 104 was shown by utilizing laser resonance ionization and exploiting differences in their vapor pressures. Three $^{167}$Tm samples produced at the IP2 irradiation station, receiving 22.8 MeV protons from Injector II at Paul Scherrer Institute (PSI), were mass separated with collected radionuclide efficiencies between 11 and 20%. Ion beam sputtering from the collection foils was identified as a limiting factor. In-situ gamma-measurements showed that up to 45% separation efficiency could be fully collected if these limits are overcome. Comparative analyses show possible neighboring mass suppression factors of more than 1,000, and overall $^{167}$Tm/Er purity increase in the same range. Both the actual achieved collection and separation efficiencies present the highest values for the mass separation of external radionuclide sources at MEDICIS to date.
Copyright/License publication: © 2021 Heinke, Chevallay, Chrysalidis, Cocolios, Duchemin, Fedosseev, Hurier, Lambert, Leenders, Marsh, van der Meulen, Sprung, Stora, Tosato, Wilkins, Zhang and Talip. (License: CC BY 4.0)

Corresponding record in: Inspire


 Element opprettet 2022-03-15, sist endret 2022-04-26


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